Originally posted by: Elizabeth Darcy
Good Lord, what amazing replies and analyses!! 👏 I think we all have ended up agreeing on one thing: good things, sweet things, positive things -- are painful for Sahir. It's not that he doesn't want to believe in goodness...I think there is still a part of him that does...it's that he would rather not deal with the pain that will sometimes come with that belief. Whether it's a lost love, seeing a loved one harmed, facing hardships, facing trauma -- the effect is clear: it has led to Sahir closing of that part of him that could truly feel...
I've written this elsewhere, and I will write it here too: I think seeing Aarzoo and developing feelings for her will be painful for Sahir. Not only for the fact that love is something he doesn't want, but because Aarzoo herself will remind him of who he once was, and who he no longer wants to be.
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